
Wearing her traditional dark dress and almost hidden by the wheat crop, she said, "I come to my farm in the early morning and start working very fast in case I am targeted by the Israeli forces." She does not know why the Israelis target the Palestinians in their land. "We are civilians and they know very well that we pose no danger to them." Al-Najjar added that she and her family have been there for decades.
Nearby, the Anadolu journalist spotted a 70-year old man who was, along with his wife and sister, harvesting their barley crop. Mahmoud Qdeeh had arrived on his farm at 9:30am. When Al-Shaer approached to speak to him, gunfire could be heard, fired from the Israeli side of the border.
Qdeeh ignored the shots, but his sister insisted that he should leave. They collected what they had harvested, packed it onto a donkey cart and fled.
Recalling her youth, Al-Najjar told the journalist that at harvest time the farmers used to prepare big meals and invite their neighbours to eat. "But, after 2000, the Israeli occupation razed hundreds of acres of Palestinian farmland and made our lives hell."
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/news/middle-east/18510-gaza-farmers-face-israeli-bullets-to-harvest-crops
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